AUSTIN -- For many Americans, the date November 22, 1963, still
brings vivid memories.

"I was in eighth grade and I was taking a math test,"
recalled John Anderson, preservation officer with the Texas State Library and
Archives Commission. "The principal waited until our math test was over
before he came and told our teacher, and I remember seeing the shock on her
face."

As the historic date of the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy nears its fiftieth anniversary, the commission is readying a new
exhibit at the Lorenzo de Zavala State Archives and Library Building featuring
historical artifacts that haven't been seen by the public in almost half a
century.

On Tuesday morning, KVUE's television camera became the first in
nearly fifty years to photograph the clothes worn by Texas Governor John B.
Connally, who was shot along with Kennedy and seriously wounded. The
centerpiece of the new exhibit, the clothes were obtained by the commission
from Connally's wife Nellie in 1964, and briefly displayed just once before
being locked away for the next five decades.

"It's absolutely unique," said Anderson. "It
hasn't been seen in fifty years, and I think for the viewers it's going to be a
first-hand, very visceral connection to the assassination."

Connally was seated in front of Kennedy in the presidential
limousine as the motorcade approached Dealey Plaza and the Texas School Book
Depository, where gunman Lee Harvey Oswald waited near a sixth floor window
armed with a high-powered hunting rifle. The shooting would leave Kennedy dead,
and Connally in serious condition with wounds to his chest, wrist and thigh.

"He didn't know at the time he was going to survive,"
said Anderson. "He thought that he had received a mortal wound. He was
pretty sure of it."

Bearing the label of Fort Worth clothierJohn L. Ashe,
Connally's dark suit is perforated by bullet holes through the chest, back,
wrist and leg. The suit's punctures match corresponding holes in Connally's
Arrow dress shirt, still heavily stained by blood despite being laundered after
the shooting. A large tear along the shirt's placket marks medical efforts to
save Connally's life.

"As I turned, I was hit, and I knew I'd been hit
badly," Connally said in abedside interviewwith
NBC News journalist Martin Agronsky at Parkland Hospital shortly afterwards.
"I knew the president had been hit, and I said, 'My God, they're going to
kill us all.'"

"In the space of a few seconds, it's unbelievable what can
happen," said Connally. "We went from great joy, anticipation,
wonderful crowds, wonderful throngs, to great tragedy."

"We've kind of gotten used to looking at it here in the
conservation lab, but it's pretty dramatic to see," Anderson told KVUE.

"These garments really have an impact when you look at
them," said conservator Sarah Norris, who worked to preserve and prepare
the clothing for exhibit. "It's an unusual opportunity to think about what
happened in 1963 and to think about what it meant."

The exhibit will focus on the state's role in the investigation
following the assassination, and will include other unique and rarely seen
artifacts such as teletype prints from news agencies in the chaos immediately
following the shooting. It will also feature historical items from a trip
President Kennedy had scheduled to take to Austin before his death.